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The New Cast Iron Skillet Cookbook: 150 Fresh Ideas for America's Favorite Pan

(Hardback)


Publishing Details

Full Title:

The New Cast Iron Skillet Cookbook: 150 Fresh Ideas for America's Favorite Pan

Contributors:

By (Author) Ellen Brown
By (photographer) Guy Ambrosino

ISBN:

9781454907749

Publisher:

Union Square & Co.

Imprint:

Sterling

Publication Date:

6th May 2014

Country:

United States

Classifications

Readership:

General

Fiction/Non-fiction:

Non Fiction

Dewey:

641.77

Physical Properties

Physical Format:

Hardback

Number of Pages:

272

Dimensions:

Width 203mm, Height 229mm, Spine 26mm

Description

Cast iron skillets are booming in popularity: they're versatile, they're relatively inexpensive, and they don't have the toxic chemicals released by artificial nonstick pans. Though cast iron was the only pan in grandma's kitchen, these 150 recipes are fresh and updated, from cornbread with Parmesan cheese and sun-dried tomatoes to frittatas, Vietnamese spring rolls, and to-die-for sticky buns.

Reviews

"For three decades, Ellen Brown has proven herself a food writer who can shine new light on just about any aspect of American cookery, and her new book proves, once and for all, that a cherished black iron skillet can be the most versatileand most modernof kitchen tools to turn out everything from fried chicken to desserts." John Mariani, author of The Encyclopedia of American Food & Drink

"This is one of those rare beautiful cookbooks you'll actually use. In fact, I'd venture to guess that you'll likely be compelled to open it dailyor at least every time you draw up a grocery listand that your trusty skillet will soon settle in to a most convenient storage spot: the stovetop." Liana Krissoff, author of Canning for a New Generation

"Ellen Browns book details the maintenance of old-fashioned skillets, and tells the colorful history of cast iron. Full of updated and everyday classic recipes and useful tips, Ellen has done it again, making The New Cast Iron Skillet an indispensable resource." Joan Nathan, author of Quiches, Kugels, and Couscous: My Search for Jewish Cooking in France

"Ellen Brown is like a well-seasoned cast iron skilletboth continue to improve with age. Ellen has compiled a scrumptious collection of original and heirloom recipes for Americas favorite cooking utensil. Great cookbooks and great skillets last forever. Fortunate are those who buy or inherit both." Irena Chalmers, author of Food Jobs 2: Ideas and Inspiration for Your Job Hunt

"If youre looking for merely a reference to get you through dinner, go elsewhere because The Cast Iron Skillet Cookbook is far more than that. It's a damn fine work that's at once a treatise, chronicle, and paean to perhaps the most versatile tool in a cook's arsenal. Ellen Brown understands the love, history, and family traditions that are infused into the very iron of these skillets. And her recipes reflect that. I promise you, with this book your cast iron skillet will never again leave the top of your stove. Its that good." David Leite, publisher of the two-time James Beard Award-winning website Leites Culinaria (LCcooks.com)


"For three decades, Ellen Brown has proven herself a food writer who can shine new light on just about any aspect of American cookery, and her new book proves, once and for all, that a cherished black iron skillet can be the most versatileand most modernof kitchen tools to turn out everything from fried chicken to desserts." John Mariani, author of The Encyclopedia of American Food & Drink

"This is one of those rare beautiful cookbooks you'll actually use. In fact, I'd venture to guess that you'll likely be compelled to open it dailyor at least every time you draw up a grocery listand that your trusty skillet will soon settle in to a most convenient storage spot: the stovetop." Liana Krissoff, author of Canning for a New Generation

"Ellen Browns book details the maintenance of old-fashioned skillets, and tells the colorful history of cast iron. Full of updated and everyday classic recipes and useful tips, Ellen has done it again, making The New Cast Iron Skillet an indispensable resource." Joan Nathan, author of Quiches, Kugels, and Couscous: My Search for Jewish Cooking in France

"Ellen Brown is like a well-seasoned cast iron skilletboth continue to improve with age. Ellen has compiled a scrumptious collection of original and heirloom recipes for Americas favorite cooking utensil. Great cookbooks and great skillets last forever. Fortunate are those who buy or inherit both." Irena Chalmers, author of Food Jobs 2: Ideas and Inspiration for Your Job Hunt

"If youre looking for merely a reference to get you through dinner, go elsewhere because The Cast Iron Skillet Cookbook is far more than that. It's a damn fine work that's at once a treatise, chronicle, and paean to perhaps the most versatile tool in a cook's arsenal. Ellen Brown understands the love, history, and family traditions that are infused into the very iron of these skillets. And her recipes reflect that. I promise you, with this book your cast iron skillet will never again leave the top of your stove. Its that good." David Leite, publisher of the two-time James Beard Award-winning website Leites Culinaria (LCcooks.com)

Author Bio

Ellen Brown gained the national limelight as the founding food editor of USA Today as well as one of the founders of the New American Cuisine movement. She has written 40 cookbooks, including the critically acclaimed Cooking with the New American Chefs (Harper & Row), which won second place in the Tastemaker Awards, and the 1989 IACP Award-winning Gourmet Gazelle Cookbook (Bantam Books). She now writes a weekly column for the Providence Journal, and her articles have appeared in numerous publications, including the Washington Post, the Los Angeles Times, Bon Appetit, and Art Culinaire. In 1985, she was inducted into the prestigious 'Who's Who of Cooking in America'.

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